Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) says it will head to the Supreme Court to challenge what it describes as the growing abuse of the Electronic Communications Act by security agencies to target journalists.
The move follows increasing concerns within the media fraternity over arrests and intimidation of journalists under provisions of the law, particularly relating to “false communication” offences.
Speaking during a media encounter between journalists and personnel from National Security, the GJA President, Albert Dwumfour, argued that the trend amounts to a form of censorship that undermines press freedom and constitutional protections.
According to him, the use of the law by security agencies effectively converts civil defamation issues into criminal cases, a situation he described as dangerous for Ghana’s democracy.
“This is a backdoor restriction on press freedom, shifting matters that belong in civil courts into police cells,” he said.
The Association maintains that the Electronic Communications Act was not intended to be used against journalists in the course of their work. It argues that provisions such as Section 76 are being misapplied to harass reporters, particularly in cases involving alleged false publications.
Mr. Dwumfour further noted that Ghana abolished criminal libel to promote media freedom, and warned that the current trend risks reversing those gains.
“After the repeal of criminal libel, defamation became a civil matter. This law was never meant to be used as a tool to hunt journalists,” he stressed.
The GJA is seeking a judicial interpretation from the Supreme Court on whether the law can be applied in its current manner against journalists, a ruling that could have far-reaching implications for media practice and press freedom in Ghana.
The Association also warned that continued arrests under the law could create a chilling effect on journalism, discouraging investigative reporting and critical scrutiny of public institutions.
Latest Stories
-
China hands over $56.5 million ECOWAS HQ in Nigeria, expanding influence in West Africa
1 minute -
Ghana’s UN resolution seeks restitution and healing, not development funding – Ablakwa
5 minutes -
EPA urges public to curb noise pollution on International Noise Awareness Day
27 minutes -
Xenophobia: Centre for Global Affairs and Responsible Governance urges AU intervention in South Africa
27 minutes -
Maxwell Lukutor secures major funding for three SHSs, 24-hour market in first term push for South Tongu Constituency
30 minutes -
Ntim Fordjour demands probe into ‘indecent’ scenes at Accra Carnival
49 minutes -
El Niño Alert: Why a possible 2027 heat record could signal droughts, floods and flood risks for Ghana
50 minutes -
UMB strengthens its leadership with appointment of Emmanuel Sackey as Group Head of Treasury
58 minutes -
Court throws out prosecution witness statements in Buffer Stock trial
1 hour -
Police seek public help to track three fugitives after Adabraka jailbreak
1 hour -
Electronic Communications Act not meant to regulate journalists’ conduct – Inusah Fuseini
1 hour -
GJA heads to Supreme Court over alleged misuse of Electronic Communications Act against journalists
1 hour -
ECG cannot operate effectively under reduced capital expenditure — Dubik Mahama warns
1 hour -
Miracles Aboagye hints at exposing top officials in galamsey crackdown row
1 hour -
EPA warns against excessive noise as Ghana marks International Noise Awareness Day
1 hour